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Princerie Museum in Verdun à Verdun dans la Meuse

Musée
Musée des Arts de la ville
Meuse

Princerie Museum in Verdun

    16 Rue de la Belle Vierge
    55100 Beaumont-en-Verdunois
Musée de la Princerie à Verdun Cour intérieure
Musée de la Princerie à Verdun
Musée de la Princerie à Verdun
Musée de la Princerie à Verdun
Musée de la Princerie à Verdun
Musée de la Princerie à Verdun
Crédit photo : MOSSOT - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
400
500
1300
1400
1500
1900
2000
IVe siècle
Creation of the office of prince
1385
Removal of the load
1525
Renaissance reconstruction
3 février 1921
Historical monument classification
1926
Purchase by the city
1932
Opening of the museum
1er février 2003
Label Musée de France
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Jacques de Musson - Chanoine and reconstructor Brother co-author of the hotel in 1525
François de Musson - Chanoine and reconstructor Brother co-author of the hotel in 1525
Félix Liénard - Museum curator (1853-1894) Local historian and archaeologist
Étienne Bourgeois - Abbé de Saint-Vanne Entered with a Romanesque lacrosse in 1452

Origin and history

The Hotel de la Princerie, located in Verdun in the Meuse, was originally the residence of the princeess, the first dignitary of the diocese after the bishop, until the abolition of this office in 1385. The present Renaissance building was rebuilt in 1525 by the brothers Jacques and François de Musson, canons of the cathedral. Gravely damaged during World War I, it was bought by the city in 1926, restored, and became the Princerie Museum in 1932, home to local art and history collections.

The museum's collections come from the Philomathic Society of Verdun, founded in 1822, which formed a natural history cabinet before enriching its holdings with art objects, legacies and state deposits. After several moves in the 19th century and a fire in 1894, the works were evacuated during the First World War. The museum settled permanently in the Princerie Hotel in 1932, obtaining the label Musée de France in 2003. His collections cover Prehistory, Gallo-Roman and medieval periods, as well as the history of Verdun and the Meuse.

Ranked a historic monument since 1921, the Princerie Hotel illustrates Renaissance civil architecture, with an interior courtyard, a garden and elements reminiscent of its religious vocation, such as a Gothic oratory and a gallery evoking cloisters. The museum exhibits medieval sculptures, earthenware, paintings (including works by Jules Bastien-Lepage), archaeological objects and testimonies of the 1870 and 1914-1918 wars. The garden, built into a lapidary museum, features merovingian sarcophagus and Gallo-Roman tombstones.

External links

Conditions of visit

  • Conditions de visite : Ouvert toute l'année
  • Ouverture annuelle : Ouvert du 1er avril au 31 octobre, de 9h30 à 12h et de 14h à 18h, tous les jours sauf le mardi.
  • Tarif individuel : Adultes : 3 € / Moins de 18 ans: gratuit
  • Contact organisation : 03 29 86 10 62